Click Here To Visit The SRGC Main Site
I haven't seen mention of the Italian (?) A. bertolonii in this thread. I have no picture unfortunately but in my experience, it does seem always to come true from seed, even though I have had many others growing nearby. It seems to be the American species that are most prone to hybridizing.
Thanks Maggi, I look forward to seeing the next IRG issue with that photo, along with more buckwheats.I'm out for the day, but tonight will post what is written about A. scopulorum ssp. perplexans in the Gentes Herbarum monograph on Aquilegia, it explains the color variation and I think readers will be interested.
This one I get from seed taken at Tajikistan.
I am Great Moravian and not Marovian, otherwise I thank TheOnionMan for further information.
Dear me, so easy to get the names confused, isn't it, even with people?
Quote from: Maggi Young on November 09, 2010, 12:20:27 PMDear me, so easy to get the names confused, isn't it, even with people? No problem. I checked the descriptions by Munz posted above by TheOnionMan. No other differences can be found.
I am Great Moravian and not Marovian, otherwise I thank TheOnionMan for further information.So the leaves should be pilose beneath in Aquilegia bertolonii whereas glabrous beneath in Aquilegia pyrenaica.Sepals are broader in the latter in reality. Botanists obviously cannot reveal a clear distinctive feature separating the two species.